My Body is Your House

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

Image By File photo, Canwest News Service [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons  By Monica A. Coleman

Reblogged from Real Spirituality for Real Life:

Theologians Charles Hartshorne, Sallie McFague and Carol P. Christ all discuss how important it is to think of the earth as the body of God. Humanity and the rest of the created world can think of themselves as living on, or more aptly, within God’s body. Such thinking, they assert, can lead us to greater reverence of the earth. After all, if we care about God, we would care about God’s body and treating it well. We would take better care of our natural environment.

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Stand Your Ground Has No Moral Ground

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

Image By Francois Polito (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons Reblogged from Sojourners:

Two boys — among others — have been killed and their families ripped apart by gun violence. The law that is meant to protect fails them. Not only do Stand Your Ground laws institutionally legitimize racism by mostly white men carried out against mostly black men, instead of reconciliation and peace, gun violence and racial fears are allowed to win the day. Where just laws were meant to preserve the common good, unjust laws like Stand Your Ground excuse us from living out our best values. It is time to make that clear from our pulpits, starting in Florida.

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Christ in Evolution

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

Image Book of Kells, Folio 32v, Christ Enthroned. This image is in the public domain, according to Wikimedia Commons

 Excerpt from the Acknowledgement page of Christ In Evolution by Ilia Delio, OSF.

Sister Ilia gives voice to the question that rose up in my heart during the most recent battle of the creation-evolution debate between Bill Nye and Ken Ham:

For a number of years I have been teaching courses in Christian spirituality and I am repeatedly impressed how the mature Christian mystic almost always arrives at a profound experience of Christ in the universe. Through the mystics I have discovered a new way of doing Christology that differs from the analytical and philosophical approach of contemporary systematic theology.  This book is born out of a theological questions clothed in a mystical garment, namely, what is the meaning of Christ for us today?

Our world today, marked by global consciousness and…

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What Would Jesus Undo?

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

I find the lyrics of this song more inspiring than the video.
The video actually seems to twist the song’s message to one more palatable to the church subculture, while the lyrics of the song call into question some of the practices of said culture.
I recommend letting the video play in the background and listen to the words. This song contains a message that all Christians need to hear, whether we want to or not.
Here are a few highlights:

Would God un-preach every sermon spoke in hatred
The kind with hell fire burning on their lips…

Would He un-say every scripture said in anger
The kind that’s used to hurt more than to help…

Would He un-keep all the treasures that we’re hoarding
Give a couple hungry mouths some food
Would He un-build all the walls the church keeps building
To keep all the sinners off our pews…

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The Spirit of the Law is Love

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

By Макаров (http://ru-oldrussia.livejournal.com/11583.html) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons By Макаров (http://ru-oldrussia.livejournal.com/11583.html) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

The text is Matthew 5:21-37.

Introduction

Starting at a very young age, people in our society are taught that certain answers are expected of them in certain situations.  There is a Sunday school urban legend that illustrates this point beautifully:

There was a Sunday school teacher leading a class of very young kids.  As part of her lesson one morning, she held up a picture of a squirrel and asked the kids if they knew what it was.  There was a dead silence in the room.  The teacher was puzzled.  She thought, “Surely, these kids know a squirrel when they see one!”  So she asked again.  And again, there was silence.  “Now kids,” she said, “do you mean to tell me that no one in this room knows what this is a picture of?”  Slowly and tentatively, one little boy in…

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When God Talks Back

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

Image Portrait of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
By Betsy G. Reyneau National Archives and Records Administration
Donated Collections
Record Group 200 Source: [http://www.archives.gov/digital_classroom/lessons/memphis_v_mlk/images/king_portrait.gif h By Peter A. Georgescu

Reblogged from Huffington Post:

When I read “Strength to Love,” a tremendous collection of Martin Luther King Jr.’s sermons, I was surprised and moved on its last pages by this particular passage, which described God in ways that feel foreign to me. While I think of God as a kind of spiritual energy, Martin Luther King Jr. related to God as a person.

The agonizing moments through which I have passed during the last few years have drawn me closer to God. I am convinced of the reality of a personal God. True, I have always believed in the personality of God. But in the past the idea of a personal God was little more than a metaphysical category that I found…

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Don’t Let Go of God

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

Image Jacopo Amigoni [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

By Rabbi Aaron Alexander

Reblogged from Huffington Post:

It’s a stunning message. No matter how small or insignificant you may perceive yourself to be, and no matter how often others may cause you to feel this way… you matter. You are essential. You can change the world. Don’t let go until you do.

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Faith in the Streets

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

By Fernando Dall'Acqua (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons By Fernando Dall’Acqua (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons By Sara Miles

Reblogged from Huffington Post:

I begin to see that city-ness, not necessarily prettiness, is a characteristic sign of heaven. Sexier and more beautiful than Eden, it’s a crowded, busy place jammed with languages and peoples, including those who argue incessantly with one another. It’s not homogenized: there’s room for all differences, desires, sufferings and healing. The city of God is a place so mixed, so layered, and so apparently impure that it proclaims a love vaster than we can come up with on our own. Here it is: Heaven on earth.

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All Dogs Go to Heaven: How Pets Draw Us Closer to God

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

Image By kallerna (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0) or GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons  By Rev. Mae Elise Cannon

Reblogged from Huffington Post:

This week, my extended family lost a dear loved one — a beautiful 165 lb. puppy (11 years old) named Chief. Chief was a beautiful creature. Understated in temperament. Loyal. Sweet. And a part of our family. It was devastating to see him go. While Chief was not my dog — he belonged to some dear friends — his loss reminded me of the great value pets play in our lives. Pets draw us closer to God and His creation. Chief’s death reminded me of my own journey with animals who have blessed me and my family. This blog is an update on one I wrote more than a year ago, but think it’s story and message is relevant today. As my loved ones grieve the loss of their…

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After the Magic

northchurchblog's avatarNorth Presbyterian Church

I love stories of spiritual journeys and transformation.  This one strikes me as unique and inspiring.

By Carl McColman

Reblogged from Beliefnet:

Ironically, I would say that becoming a Catholic was the logical result of applying Pagan principles to my life. Paganism taught me to trust the authority of my inner, intuitive wisdom. When my inner guidance directed me to do the one thing I would have dismissed as unthinkable, I did it anyway. With respect to Robert Frost, that single act of trust has made all the difference.

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